How To Identify Dance Music – Part 2

confusedIn How to Identify Dance Music,  Part 1,  I covered some timing definitions and how to identify music for smooth dance styles.   Now I will finish this series with latin and swing styles.

Tango

Timing:  4/4 Time (usually)
Tempo:  approximately 120  beats per minute
Beat Representation:  tap tap tap tap drum-roll that leads into repeat pattern
count:  sometimes taught vocalizing the steps with the letters T, A, N, G, O

Tango music has a distinctive style and is probably one of the most easily identifiable.   It is most often defined by the staccato nature of steps and the unique instrument (bandoneon  similar to accordion) played.

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How To Identify Dance Music – Part 1

Is This a Waltz or Foxtrot

Is This a Waltz or Foxtrot

While at a dance this week, I was engaged in a discussion about dance styles and music.  The lady I was talking with said she never knew what dance she was supposed to do until either the style was announced or she could see what others were doing.

I told her it would take some time to begin to hear the underlying rhythm pattens but it would happen.  Looking back, I wish I had put more thought into my answer so I’m going to try to give a better answer to her question here.

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Waltz No More – Could Our Favorite Dances be Endangered Species?

Endangered Species

Endangered Species

 I was thinking the other day about the dances we enjoy and what the future holds for them.   Looking back through history, many dances come and go.  Some last for centuries while others are gone after a few short years.   

 Let me say that I’m not making any predictions.  I’m just speculating on what the future  could hold for some classic dance styles.

I am a great lover of music.  I can listen to many different genres of music from big band to country to contemporary and I love them all.  I wonder though, as music ages and generations come and go.  What will happen to  the dances we associate with that style of music?

Of course, we all know that dances are based on timing and not the music style, but I believe it’s safe to say  that in most cases, the two are closely related.

What will happen to the waltz and quickstep in another thirty or forty years?  Will we still be listening to the music from the big band era?  Will it become more and more difficult to find contemporary music with the timing for these dances.  Waltz maybe, but how often do you find contemporary Quickstep?   Will Foxtrot someday become  as rare as the polka?

What influences the popularity or decline of a particular dance?  One thing that technology has given us is the ability to record and preserve music.  This very well could be one possible reason why dances like Waltz and Quickstep have survived.  

Prior to recorded music,  dance styles were strictly driven by the popularity of music and what was performed live by orchestras or bands.   I believe this could have greatly influenced the life of many dance styles.

I know much effort has gone into preserving the current ballroom and latin dances.  The competitive organizations, local clubs and dance studios have standardized the dances to teach and hopefully we will see these dances continue in popularity  for many generations to come.

What do you think the future holds for these favorite dance styles?

Argentine Tango – Musicality

 What makes Argentine Tango unique among all styles of dance?  Is it the unique movements or could it be something else?

http://singletango.com/347/argentine-tango-musicality/

 Tango dancers often think that the great divide in tango dancing is in the styles, but it may be in the musicality. Good musicality connects the dancers and even connects dancers to the onlookers. No matter your tango taste, whether open embrace, closed embrace, tango nuevo or other styles, good musicality is important.  Regardless of the style, dancers become connected by interpreting and enjoying the tango music in that moment.

How does musicality impact your Tango?

Standard Ballroom Dance Tempi

Dance tempi in measures per minute as recommended by the National Dance Council of America, Inc. The Standard Ballroom Dances are those dances which have not only survived the test of time but have been danced continuously since their inception. A dancer who understands the similarities as well as the differences of all the social dances can readily recognize and adapt as new dances appear on the scene. Frequently, people are not aware of the gradual but continuous change that takes place in all the standard dances.

 
Read More Standard Ballroom Dance Tempi

Favorite Foxtrot Music

This is my personal list of favorite songs for Foxtrot.   I am constantly looking for new songs and this list changes often.   Click the play button to listen to the tracks.

What are some of your favorites?

Swing and Cha Cha Dance Music by a Pop Legend – Michael Jackson

We Dance Swing and Cha Cha to his music every week.  No one artist in recent history has had as much impact on the music industry as Michael Jackson.  Love him or hate him,  his music has influenced countless artists and performers, defined a decade and left a legacy for the music industry. 

From Unprescedented success and superstar status to controversy and scandal,  his music transcended all barriers to make him The King of Pop.

These are some of the songs that dancers will always love to hear when on the dance floor long after his passing.

 

Playlist Tracks and Dance Style

  • Rockin Robin – East Coast Swing
  • P.Y.T – East Coast Swing
  • Billie Jean -  Cha Cha
  • The Way You Make me Feel – East or West Coast Swing
  • Black or White – East Coast Swing/ Cha Cha
  • Remember the Time – East or West Coast Swing
  • Say Say Say – East Coast Swing
  • Who Is It – West Coast Swing
  • Blood on the Dance Floor – West Coast Swing

 Are there any Michael Jackson songs you love for  dancing?  Leave a Comment.

A Brief Guide to Tango Music for Beginners

For those who are passionate about Argentine Tango but just beginning, this article is a great help in finding composers and music for this inspiring dance.

Exerpt…. Tango music is something even the most unschooled among us recognize  when we hear it. Even if we don’t know what a bandoneon is, we know that concertina-like sound,

Bandoneon

blending with violins and perhaps some piano music. We recognize the beat, technically called “two-by-four,” even if we know nothing about music. And above all, we know the emotions of the tango sound, the varying mix of lament, woe, romance, passion, and every nuance in-between

        Read the Complete Article here…..

Favorite Rumba Music

This is my personal list of favorite songs for Rumba.   I am constantly looking for new songs and this list changes often.   Click the play button to listen to the tracks.

 

What are some of your favorites?

Favorite Waltz Music

This is my personal list of favorite songs for Waltz.   I am constantly looking for new songs and this list changes often.   Click the play button to listen to the tracks.

 

 

What are some of your favorites?